THE ARDEN DICTIONARY OF SHAKESPEARE QUOTATIONS. Compiled by means of Jane Armstrong. 396 pp. London : Thomson studying, 2000 (1999). the current compilation comprises 3000 quotations, either famous and lesser-known, from Shakespeare's performs and poems. The quotations range in size from brief sentences akin to "For he was once nice of heart," via to longer passages equivalent to Hamlet's soliloquy, "To be or to not be," that can run to just about a web page or extra.

From the Preface: THIS little e-book lays no declare to any specific benefit past furnishing in handy shape a few fabric for these commencing to examine the Avesta. because it is meant in simple terms for an creation, and being designed because the first of a sequence of examining books, the variety of pages of texts has been constrained.

Six students discover the character of historical past and old reconstruction and where of heritage inside of religious study. The uncritical use of either textual content and artifact that keeps to dominate histories of Israel and Judah testifies to the necessity for a much broader grassroots wisdom of the fundamental concerns enthusiastic about doing heritage as a biblical pupil.

Extra info for A Chinese-English dictionary: Hakka-dialect, as spoken in Kwang-tung province

Sample text

HELENA. [Goes quickly up to VOITSKI] You must do your best; you must use all your power to get my husband and myself away from here to-day! Do you hear? I say, this very day! VOITSKI. [Wiping his face] Oh! Ah! Oh! All right! I--Helena, I saw everything! HELENA. [In great agitation] Do you hear me? I must leave here this very day! ] TELEGIN. I am not very well myself, your Excellency. I have been limping for two days, and my head-- Thesaurus agitation: (n) disturbance, excitement, limping: (n) lameness, gimp, dull, pale, blemished.

It is long since I have loved any one. SONIA. You love no one? ASTROFF. Not a soul. I only feel a sort of tenderness for your old nurse for old-times' sake. The peasants are all alike; they are stupid and live in dirt, and the educated people are hard to get along with. One gets tired of them. All our good friends are petty and shallow and see no farther than their own noses; in one word, they are dull. Those that have brains are hysterical, devoured with a mania for self-analysis. They whine, they hate, they pick faults everywhere with unhealthy sharpness.